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Canadian Undergraduate Research Network
  • About CURN
  • CURNcast
  • DISCOVERExpand
    • What is Undergraduate Research?
    • What Does Research Look Like?
    • How to Get Started With Research?
    • Indigenous Inquiry
    • Research Journeys
  • CONNECTExpand
    • Connect with CURN
    • How to Pick a Research Supervisor
    • Indigenous Communities
    • Research Habits
    • Tools & Resources
    • Glossary
  • ENGAGEExpand
    • Creating a Research Question
    • Literature Review
    • Methods & Methodologies
    • Indigenous Research Methodologies
    • Ethics & Integrity
    • Research Proposals
    • Data & Analysis
    • Research Guides for Data
  • BECOMEExpand
    • Sharing Knowledge
    • Indigenous Knowledge Mobilization
    • Presenting Tips
    • What to do When Things Go Wrong
    • Opportunities
    • Research Showcase
  • Blog
Canadian Undergraduate Research Network

Connect with CURN

Send a message to the people of CURN! Whether you have a question, suggestion, or just want to say hi, we built this page to allow us to hear from the CURN community at large. Reach out to us at curn@tru.ca!

Frequently Asked Questions

CURN was made for students by students, with the goal of paving the way towards stronger undergraduate research in Canada. That being said, research does not happen in a vacuum – it is informed and influenced by the people doing it, the communities wherein research is conducted, and many other factors. So, if you’re reading this website, odds are you’re exactly who we’d want to hear from – irrespective of your role, affiliation, or interests! Reach out to us at curn@tru.ca!

CURN was made for students by students, so it isn’t surprising to hear that CURN is run and built largely by students across Canada. The project originally started at Thompson Rivers University, and is still overseen by the Student Research team there. That being said, we’re building our portfolio of collaborators to continue expanding CURN across provincial and national borders, so that we can create a community of peers interested in furthering undergraduate research globally!

We love to work with students, faculty, and community members to advance undergraduate research. From writing a blog post about your research and experience, to envisioning novel projects that can help other undergraduate students in their journeys – CURN is the result of years of collaboration, and we’d love to keep that going! If you have an idea or project in mind, we’d love to hear about it and help however we can. Send us a message at curn@tru.ca!

Reach out to us at curn@tru.ca! We review our inboxes frequently to make sure CURN voices are heard throughout the work we do, and we would love to hear from you!

Land Acknowledgement

The CURN Website is Hosted at TRU, which is located on the traditional lands of the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc (Kamloops campus) and the T’exelc (Williams Lake campus) within Secwepemcúlucw, the traditional and unceded territory of the Secwépemc. The region TRU serves also extends into the territories of the St’át’imc, Nlaka’pamux, Nuxalk, Tŝilhqot’in, Dakelh, and Syilx peoples.

TRU acknowledges the important contribution of the TRU Community Trust (TRUCT) to generously support research at TRU that benefits students, faculty, staff and its communities. 

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Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a CC BY-NC 4.0

  • About CURN
  • CURNcast
  • DISCOVER
    • What is Undergraduate Research?
    • What Does Research Look Like?
    • How to Get Started With Research?
    • Indigenous Inquiry
    • Research Journeys
  • CONNECT
    • Connect with CURN
    • How to Pick a Research Supervisor
    • Indigenous Communities
    • Research Habits
    • Tools & Resources
    • Glossary
  • ENGAGE
    • Creating a Research Question
    • Literature Review
    • Methods & Methodologies
    • Indigenous Research Methodologies
    • Ethics & Integrity
    • Research Proposals
    • Data & Analysis
    • Research Guides for Data
  • BECOME
    • Sharing Knowledge
    • Indigenous Knowledge Mobilization
    • Presenting Tips
    • What to do When Things Go Wrong
    • Opportunities
    • Research Showcase
  • Blog
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